1 3912 110 LIFE-SPAN EXTENSION BY CALORIC RESTRICTION IS DETERMINED BY TYPE AND LEVEL OF FOOD REDUCTION AND BY REPRODUCTIVE MODE IN BRACHIONUS MANJAVACAS (ROTIFERA). WE MEASURED LIFE SPAN AND FECUNDITY OF THREE REPRODUCTIVE MODES IN A CLONE OF THE MONOGONONT ROTIFER BRACHIONUS MANJAVACAS SUBJECTED TO CHRONIC CALORIC RESTRICTION (CCR) OVER A RANGE OF FOOD CONCENTRATIONS OR TO INTERMITTENT FASTING (IF). IF INCREASED LIFE SPAN 50%-70% FOR ALL THREE MODES, WHEREAS CCR INCREASED LIFE SPAN OF ASEXUAL FEMALES DERIVED FROM SEXUALLY OR ASEXUALLY PRODUCED EGGS, BUT NOT THAT OF SEXUAL FEMALES. THE MAIN EFFECT OF CR ON BOTH ASEXUAL MODES WAS TO DELAY DEATH AT YOUNG AGES, RATHER THAN TO PREVENT DEATH AT MIDDLE AGES OR TO GREATLY EXTEND MAXIMUM LIFE SPAN; IN CONTRAST CR IN SEXUAL FEMALES GREATLY INCREASED THE LIFE SPAN OF A FEW LONG-LIVED INDIVIDUALS. LIFETIME FECUNDITY DID NOT DECREASE WITH CCR, SUGGESTING A LACK OF RESOURCE ALLOCATION TRADE-OFF BETWEEN SOMATIC MAINTENANCE AND REPRODUCTION. MULTIPLE OUTCOMES FOR A CLONAL LINEAGE INDICATE THAT DIFFERENT RESPONSES ARE ESTABLISHED THROUGH EPIGENETIC PROGRAMMING, WHEREAS DIFFERENCES IN LIFE-SPAN ALLOCATIONS SUGGEST THAT MULTIPLE GENETIC MECHANISMS MEDIATE LIFE-SPAN EXTENSION. 2013 2 227 27 ADAPTATION OF AN OUTBREAKING INSECT DEFOLIATOR TO CHRONIC NUTRITIONAL STRESS. DURING INSECT OUTBREAKS, THE HIGH NUMBER OF INDIVIDUALS FEEDING ON ITS HOST PLANT CAUSES A DEPLETION OF THE FOOD SOURCE. REDUCED AVAILABILITY AND DECREASED QUALITY OF NUTRIENTS NEGATIVELY INFLUENCE LIFE-HISTORY TRAITS OF INSECTS DRIVING THEM TO DEVELOP ADAPTIVE STRATEGIES TO PERSIST IN THE ENVIRONMENT. IN A LABORATORY EXPERIMENT WITH THREE REPETITIONS, WE TESTED THE EFFECT OF CHRONIC NUTRITIONAL STRESS ON SPRUCE BUDWORM PERFORMANCE DURING THREE GENERATIONS TO DETERMINE THE ADAPTIVE STRATEGIES EMPLOYED BY THE INSECT TO DEAL WITH A SELECTION PRESSURE PRODUCED BY LOW-QUALITY DIET. OUR RESULTS SHOW THAT ALL TESTED LIFE-HISTORY TRAITS (MORTALITY, DEVELOPMENTAL TIME, PUPAL MASS, GROWTH RATE AND FEMALE FECUNDITY) BUT FEMALE FERTILITY WERE NEGATIVELY INFLUENCED BY THE LOW-QUALITY DIET SIMULATING FOOD DEPLETION DURING OUTBREAK CONDITIONS. HOWEVER, ESPECIALLY FEMALES IN THE THIRD GENERATION UNDER CHRONIC NUTRITIONAL STRESS SHOW AN ADAPTIVE RESPONSE IN LIFE-HISTORY TRAITS WHEN COMPARED TO THOSE REARED ONLY ONE GENERATION ON LOW-QUALITY DIET. LARVAL DEVELOPMENTAL TIME SIGNIFICANTLY DECREASED AND PUPAL MASS, GROWTH RATE AND FECUNDITY SIGNIFICANTLY INCREASED. THE STUDY DEMONSTRATES THE CAPACITY OF SPRUCE BUDWORM TO REACT TO CHRONIC NUTRITIONAL STRESS WITH ADAPTATIONS THAT MAY BE CAUSED BY EPIGENETIC PARENTAL EFFECTS. THIS INFORMATION CAN HELP TO UNDERSTAND THE COURSE OF AN OUTBREAK ESPECIALLY AT PEAK DENSITIES AND DURING THE COLLAPSE. 2015 3 6911 17 [TWO GERMAN BIRTH COHORTS: GINIPLUS AND LISAPLUS]. NUMEROUS CHRONIC DISEASES IN CHILDHOOD AND ADULTHOOD HAVE THEIR ORIGINS IN PERINATAL LIFE AND ARE POTENTIALLY INFLUENCED BY TRANS-GENERATIONAL EPIGENETIC PROCESSES. THEREFORE, PROSPECTIVE BIRTH COHORTS CAN SUBSTANTIALLY CONTRIBUTE TO OUR KNOWLEDGE ABOUT THE ETIOLOGY OF DISEASES INCLUDING MODIFIABLE RISK FACTORS. THE TWO POPULATION-BASED GERMAN BIRTH COHORTS GINIPLUS AND LISAPLUS AIM TO DESCRIBE THE NATURAL COURSE OF CHRONIC DISEASES AND INTERMEDIATE PHENOTYPES IN CHILDHOOD AND ITS DETERMINANTS, AND TO IDENTIFY POTENTIAL GENETIC EFFECT MODIFICATIONS. IN THE MID-1990S, 5,991 (GINIPLUS) AND 3,097 (LISAPLUS) HEALTHY, TERM NEWBORNS WERE RECRUITED FOR LONG-TERM FOLLOW-UP IN FOUR REGIONS OF GERMANY. THE FOLLOW-UP RATE FOR THE FIRST 10 YEARS WAS ABOUT 55%. WE ANALYZED THE GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT OF OVERWEIGHT, INFECTIONS AND ALLERGIC DISEASES, MENTAL AND ORAL HEALTH, METABOLIC AND INFLAMMATORY PARAMETERS AND THE ROLE OF POTENTIAL RISK FACTORS INCLUDING GENETICS. THE RESULTS OF THESE TWO BIRTH COHORTS SUBSTANTIALLY CONTRIBUTE TO THE CURRENT KNOWLEDGE ABOUT THE NATURAL COURSE OF THESE HEALTH PARAMETERS. THESE DATA WERE INCLUDED IN MANY INTERNATIONAL PROJECTS AND CONSORTIA FOR PURPOSES OF INTERNATIONAL COMPARISONS OF PREVALENCE AND CONSISTENCY OF FINDINGS, AND TO INCREASE THE POWER OF THE ANALYSES. 2012 4 6914 22 [VITAMIN D DEFICIENCY IN PREGNANCY AND ITS IMPACT ON THE FETUS, THE NEWBORN AND IN CHILDHOOD]. OBJECTIVE: VITAMIN D DEFICIENCY (VDD) IN PREGNANT WOMEN AND THEIR CHILDREN IS AN IMPORTANT HEALTH PROBLEM WITH SEVERE CONSEQUENCES FOR THE HEALTH OF BOTH. THUS, THE OBJECTIVES OF THIS REVIEW WERE TO REASSESS THE MAGNITUDE AND CONSEQUENCES OF VDD DURING PREGNANCY, LACTATION AND INFANCY, ASSOCIATED RISK FACTORS, PREVENTION METHODS, AND TO EXPLORE EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS IN EARLY FETAL LIFE CAPABLE OF EXPLAINING MANY OF THE NON-SKELETAL BENEFITS OF VITAMIN D (VID). DATA SOURCE: ORIGINAL AND REVIEW ARTICLES, AND CONSENSUS DOCUMENTS WITH ELEVATED LEVEL OF EVIDENCE FOR VDD-RELATED CLINICAL DECISIONS ON THE HEALTH OF PREGNANT WOMEN AND THEIR CHILDREN, AS WELL AS ARTICLES ON THE INFLUENCE OF VID ON EPIGENETIC MECHANISMS OF FETAL PROGRAMMING OF CHRONIC DISEASES IN ADULTHOOD WERE SELECTED AMONG ARTICLES PUBLISHED ON PUBMED OVER THE LAST 20 YEARS, USING THE SEARCH TERM VITD STATUS, IN COMBINATION WITH PREGNANCY, OFFSPRING HEALTH, CHILD OUTCOMES, AND PROGRAMMING. DATA SYNTHESIS: THE FOLLOWING ITEMS WERE ANALYZED: VID PHYSIOLOGY AND METABOLISM, RISK FACTORS FOR VDD AND IMPLICATIONS IN PREGNANCY, LACTATION AND INFANCY, CONCENTRATION CUTOFF TO DEFINE VDD, THE VARIABILITY OF METHODS FOR VDD DETECTION, RECOMMENDATIONS ON VID REPLACEMENT IN PREGNANT WOMEN, THE NEWBORN AND THE CHILD, AND THE EPIGENETIC INFLUENCE OF VID. CONCLUSIONS: VDD IS A COMMON CONDITION AMONG HIGH-RISK PREGNANT WOMEN AND THEIR CHILDREN. THE ROUTINE MONITORING OF SERUM 25(OH)D3 LEVELS IN ANTENATAL PERIOD IS MANDATORY. EARLY PREVENTIVE MEASURES SHOULD BE TAKEN AT THE SLIGHTEST SUSPICION OF VDD IN PREGNANT WOMEN, TO REDUCE MORBIDITY DURING PREGNANCY AND LACTATION, AS WELL AS ITS SUBSEQUENT IMPACT ON THE FETUS, THE NEWBORN AND THE CHILD. 2015 5 4019 24 LOW-DOSE OR LOW-DOSE-RATE IONIZING RADIATION-INDUCED BIOEFFECTS IN ANIMAL MODELS. ANIMAL EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES INDICATE THAT ACUTE OR CHRONIC LOW-DOSE IONIZING RADIATION (LDIR) (